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Show J ! I Costs to cents and equals ao cents worth of any other kind of bluing'. Wont Freeze, Spill, Break Nor Spot Clothes DIRECTIONS FOR USE around in the Water, Long Lives. A contemporary has discovered that no person who ever deliberately set out to live 100 years accomplished the feat. What of it? A great many men and women who have deliberately set out to live honorable and useful lives have lived ten centuries in point of usefulness to the world- .- Minneapolis Times. Our Our Our Our tea dealing dealing dealing dealing returitf per but. Your SdulUog's a challenge a challenge a challenge a challenge your looney if you tioul Ul.t Definition of Coquette. To give you nothing, and to make you expect everything; to dawdle on the threshold of love while the doors are closed this is all the science of a coquette. T. Bernard. excellent Opportunity to Arrange for Your Reception at SL Louis, During the Fair, Free. if you intend going to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. St. Louis, Missouri, opened by President Roosevelt April 30th, 1904, it will be very much to your advantage to correspond with Mr. F. H. Worsley, No. 411 Dooley block, Salt Lake City, Utah. Mr. Worsley has arranged to have all bis parties met at the St. Louis depot and escorted to their lodgings, which will be reserved in advance. Information relative to passenger ticket limits, hotel rates, rates and all other necessary information asked for will be cheerfully given free of charge. This will especially be of benefit to these desiring to travel with Utah parties or in parties of four or five. School teachers will also bear something to their Interests by writing above narty. stop-over- Gulls in United Kingdom. Before the Belfast Natural History society Mr. J. Brown gave reasons for concluding that there are 2,000,000 gulls in the United Kingdom, and that during the herring season each bird destroyed 200 fry a day, or 12,000 during the two months of the season. These, if they had come to maturity, would have been worth 24,o00,000. London Feathered Life. TEA The English and Irish old woman lives in a garret on tea, and dies in a garret on tea ; and how did she get to be old? On tea. Examples of Red Tapism. There is a story of a man in the British foreign office who one day seized a heavy poker and with maniacal frenzy attacked his chair until he had knocked off one of its legs. Then he went on with his work in another chair, happy. The explanation of his conduct was that his first chair lacked a caster and the foreign office will not replace a caster nothing less than a leg. The other day a man took his seat in a dining car of a railway. He tried to open a window, but the patent spring had gone wrong. The waiter ws called. Sorry, sir, I have not been able to open that window for weeks," he said. But if you could happen to shove your elbow through ft when you are having your lunch I could get the The travwhole tltfng put to right. eler took the hint. well-know- n Many Children Are Sickly. hfother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse In Childrens Home, New York, cure Summer Complaint, Feverishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Cape Cod Wedding Custom. The people down on Cape Cod have a way of letting all the world know when a man and his wife set out on their wedding Journey. A friend who has just returned from the cape board-lethe train one afternoon with a conspicuously undevoted young couple. Their clothes were carefully chosen from last years stock, and they scarcely glanced at each other as they took their seats in the car. The whistle blew and the train started. The village slid away, but the whistle kept up its wild tooting. Everybody in the car turned to grin at the two young people, and they blushed All the way to the next hopelessly. It is station the whistle shrieked. a Cape Cod custom, and everybody , who heard knew that Jim and Susy had started on their honeymoon. TEA bow much weight do you think there is in the taste of it ? is no tT measure for tea! Japanese Superstition. The Japanese have a plant called the otoma, which is considered by many to be a type of the marriage state. When a young couple of believers" marry they will take a specimen of the otoma with them, plant it and carefully tend it and be fully persuaded that their conjugal felicity is assured as long as it lives and f knitting! "But they willna. Neil, and they never would. If theres a pot o rebellion brewing between the twa poles, women will be dabbling In 1L They bavfe aye been against lawfu' authority. The restraints o paradise was tyranny to them And they get worse and worse; it lsna ane apple would do them the noo; theyd strip the tree, my lad, to its vera topmost branch." You ought to know, father. I have small and sad experience with , them. Sae, I hope youll stand by my side. We twa can keep the house thegither. If Ye are a right, the government will whistle by a womans talk." Did you not say Katherine was A ROMANCE OF NEW YORK Author of By AMELIA E. BARR, Frlond Olivia.," Thou and tho Other One," Eto. I Copyright, 18SS, by Dodd, Mead aad Company. J CHAPTER XIV. (Continued.) lum that we are coming in two weeks I will give it to him again. With to cast our lot with America. When Joris Van Heemskirk received my own bands I will give it to him once more. Oh. Richard, my lover, this letter he was very much excited my husband! Now I will hasten to by Its contents. He was sitting in the calm evening, see thee. She reached London the next night, with unloosened buckles, in a cloud and, weary and terrified, drove at of fragrant tobacco, talking of these once to the small hostlery where things. Then he put on his hat and walked down his garden. He was Hyde lay. he cried; and hU standing on the river bank, and the "Katherine! voice was as weak and as tearful as meadows over it were green and fair to see, and the fresh wind blew into that of a troubled child. his soul a thought of its own Here come I, my dear one. liberty. He looked up and "Oh, how you love me, Katherine! She took from her bosom the SL down the river, and lifted his face to I give It to thee the clear sky. and said aloud. BeautiNicholas ribbon. To be thy children we again. At the first time I loved thee; ful land! now, my husband, ten thousand times should not deserve, if one inch of thy more I love thee. As I went through soil we yielded to a tyrant. Truly a vadeiland to me and to mine thou the papers, I found It. And between their clasped hands it hast been. Truly do I love thee. Then, with his mini made up, he lay the bit of orange ribbon that had went into the house. , handseled all their happiness. In a few minutes Elder Semple came "It is the promise of everything I In. He looked exceedingly worried, cam give thee, ray loved one, whisand, although Joris and he avoided pered Katherine. "It Is the luck of Richard Hyde. politics by a kind of tacit agreement, Dearest wife, thou hast given me my he could not. keep to kirk and commercial matters, but constantly relife back again. turned to one subject--- a vessel lying at Murrays wharf, which had sold CHAPTER XV. lier cargo of moiasses and rum to the Committee of Safety. Turning Westward. Jons let the elder drift from one It was a hot August afternoon, and to another, and he was just Hyde sat at an open window at Hyde grievance Manor. He was pale and wasted from in the middle of a sentence containbis long sickness, but there was spec- ing the opinion of Sears and Willet, ulation and purpose in bis face, and when Bram's entrance arrested it. He he had evidently cast away the mental walked straight to the side of Joris: Father, we have closed his majes- apathy of the invalid. As he sat thus, a servant entered and said a few tys custom house forever. We! Who, then, Bram? words which made him turn with a "The Committee of Safety and the the to open manner glad, expectant Sons of Liberty." door; and, as he did so, a man of near Semple rose to his feet, trembling sixty years of age passed through it with Let me tell you, then, passion. a handsome, lordly looking man, who had that striking personal re- Bram, you are a parcel o rogues and rebels; and. If I were his majesty. Id semblance to Hyde which affectionate gibbet the last ane o you. brothers often have to one another. Sit down, Ill "Patience, elder. "Faith, William, you are welcome How delighted I am to see speak home! No, councillor, Ill no sit down unyou! Tis twelve years since we met, til I ken what kind o' men Im sitting Dick. And Hydo Manor is a miracle. wl. Oot wi yourmaist secret thoughts. I expected to find it mouldy and Wba are you for? For the people and for freedom, am mossy. On the contrary it is a place I, said Joris, calmly rising to his of perfect beauty. Too long have we borne injusAnd it is all my Katherine's doing. feet. She is my angel. I am unworthy of tice. Bram, my son, I am your comrade in this quarrel. He spoke with her goodness and beauty. not rapid speech, and with but fervent, well as tell I may Dick, Why, then, a firm, round voice, full of magical you that I have also found a treasure In kind. same fact, sympathies. past belief of the Ill hear nae mair o such folly. Dick, I am married, and have two Gie me my bonnet and plaid, madam, sons." 11 be going. I hope the morn There was a moments profound si- and a measure o common-sense- . will you bring shadow an Inexplicable lence, and was He at the door as he but face; passed rapidly over Hydes but, ere he passed It, he lifted it was fleeting as a thought, and, ere spoke; his bonnet above his head and said, the pause became strained and painGod save the .king! God save his and brother to said, his turned ful, he of Enggracious majesty, George With all my William. "I am glad, land! heart, I am glad. ' Joris turned to his son. To shut up I was married very quietly, and the kings customs was an overt act of have been in Italy ever since. I was treason. Bram, then, had fully comtold that you had left the army. mitted himself, and, following out his I When true. That is exactly own thoughts, he asked abruptly, heard that Lord Percys regiment was What will come of it, Bram? designed for America, and against the War will come, and liberty a Americans, I put it out of the king s commonwealth, a great coungreat busia such on me send to power try. ness. In the meantime Semple, fuming Indeed, I think the Americans have and ejaculating, was making his way and I find the town In been home. However, before he had a great commotion upon the patter. slowly gone very far, he was overtaken by burned have York of New The people his son Neil, now a very staid and Hutcheffigies of Lord North and Gov. gentleman, holding under the stately no were inson, and the new troops a high legal position in sooner landed than five hundred of government the investigation of the disputed New them deserted In a body. Hampshire grants. Hydes white face was crimson with He listened respectfully to his fathexcitement, and his eyes glowed like ers animadversions on the folly of That was like stars as he listened. the Van Heemskirks; but he was New York; and, faith, if I had been thinking mainly of the first news told there, I would have helped them! h;m the early return of Katherine. owe I you there? not go Why He was conscious that he still loved much for the hope, of which my hapKatherine, and that he still hated piness has robbed you. I will take Hyde. So Nell was somber and silent. I at its Manor price; highest Hyde His father was uncertain as to his will add to it fifty thousand pounds views, and he did not want to force or succesthe of loss the indemnity for hurry a decision. sion. You may buy land enough for Next morning, when the elder a duchy there, and found in the New reached the store, the clerks and porWorld a new line of the old family. ters were all standing together talkDick, my dear brother, out of real ing. He knew quite well what topic words. these I love and honor, speak they were discussing with such eager Indeed, WTUiam, I am very sensible movements and excited speech. But of your kindness, and I will consider I think, in- they dispersed to their work at the well your proposition. sight of his sour, stern face, and he deed, that my Katherine will be in a did not intend to open , fresh dispute to return to her transport of delight by any question. native land. and clerks then showed Almost with the words she entered, a Apprentices great deal of deference to their masclothed in a white India muslin, with and Eider Semple demanded the carnations at her breast. The earl ters, measure full ,due to him. Something, her cheeks bowed low, and then kissed however, in the carriage, in the faces. and led her to a chair, which he In the very tones of his servants placed between Hyde and himself. offended him; and he soon Katherine was predisposed to emi- voices, that various small duties Siscoered loved the she dearly gration, but yet been had neglected. Durbeautiful. so home she had made Listen to me, lads, he said angrily, ing Hydes convalescence, also, other Til have nae politics mired up wi and become hopeful had very plans and imports. Neither king my exports not cast be could andthey pleasant, nor Congress has aught to do wi my aside without some reluctance. and If there is among you It was on a cold, 'stormy afternoon business; In February, when the fens were ane o' them fools that ca themselves o Liberty, Ill pay him whatwhite with snow. Hyde sat by the big the Sons a letter from ever I owe him now, and he can wood fire, Joris Van Heemskirk, which also In- gang to Madam Liberty for his future closed a copy of Josiah Quincys wage. He was standing on the step of his speech on the Boston Port Bill. Katherine had a piece of worsted work In high counting desk as he spoke, and he peered over the little wooden railher bands. with It was at this moment Lettlce came ing at the men scattered about in with a bundle of newspapers. They pens or hammers or goods In their be brought by Sir Thomas Swaffhams hands. There was a moments silence, man quietly laid then a middle-ageman, sir, with Sir Thomas' complitools with which he was ments; there being news he thinks down the closing a box, and walked up to the you would like to read, sir. one with the eager desk, The next moment, every Sempapers Hyde opened him. had followed in the place from news curiosity and read the ple was amazed and angry, but he America. no sign of either emotion. He I must draw my sword again, made counted to the most accurate fraction imhand his as he said, Katherine, I every one's due, and let them go withpulsively went to his left side. out iue word of remonstrance. thought I had done with it forever; But. as soon as he was alone, he felt hut, by St. George, I'll draw It in this full bitterness of their desertion, the quarrel! and he could not keep the tears out of "The American quarrel, Richard? "No other could so move me. Every his eyes as he looked at their empty , good man and true wishes them well. places. At this juncture Neil entered the Are you willing? Heres a bonnie pass, Neil; Only to be with you, only to please store. every man has left the store. I may you, Richard. I have no other happias weel put up the shutters. ness. There are other men to be hired. Then It is settled. The ear! buys They were maistly a auld standHyde as it stands; we have nou.?q except our personal effects to pack bys, auld married men that ought to to yonr father. Tell have hail mair sense. Write - d Tea is almost nothing; Weight J The Bow of Orange Ribbon The married men are the trouole-makers- ; the women have hatched and nursed this rebellion. If they would only spin their webs, and mind their i I osto. 6" 'VJ.' Colors of the Moment. As the season advances green and blue separately aud again combined my be said to be the colors of the moment. Pongees and raw silks are popular fabrics. A model of dark blue pongee, with a raised stripe running through it, has a skirt with very little goring, and it is tucked horizoncoming back? all the way around the hip, havtally I did that. See there, again. Hyde ing a box plait down the center of has dropped his uniform, and sold a the front and hack. These tucks are that he has, and is coming to fight in stitched about six or Inches in a quarrel thats nane o bis. Heard depth and then allowedeight to flare with you ever such foolishness? But it is four deep tucks running vertically Katherines doing; theres little doot round the bottom, each of these tucks i o that headed by halMuch wide row of entre Hes turned rebel, then? The skirt is cut straight doux. Ay has he. Thats what women do. around, and the bodice, which is Politics and rebellion is the same tucked in tucks, blouses thing to them. slightly over the belt. A beautiful Well, father, I shall not turn rebel. white Irish lace yoke and the collar Oh, Neil, you take a load eff my complete the neck, and the sleeves are heart by thae words! gathered into the yoke quite full and I have nothing against the king, fall to the line of the elbow. Here and I could not be Hyde's comrade. again is a puff and below is a tight-fitte(To be continued.) sleeve of Irish Crochet. half-inc- GESTURES IN GENERAL USE. Leather Trimming. decided novelty in the way of trimming for some of the new nuns collar veiling waists are the turn-ove- r and cuffs made of soft leather. An example of this is a pale blue waist trimmed with collar and cuffs of soil tan leather, in shape somewhat similar to the embroidered and lace collar and cuff sets so much in demand during the spring and summer season. Leather trimmings are being used to some extent on the new tailored suits and raincoats, so that this novelty may meet with quite as much of a success as a waist trimming as in the other A Motions That Are Common to All . Na- successfully: Tack the rug on a bit of bare floor, the back piazza being as good a place as any. Scrub thoroughly with warm ammonia suds, and rinse with many clear waters until all the soap is removed. Let the rug dry on the floor without removing the tacks, then take up and it will not shrink, roll, nor pull out of shape. Misses Fancy Blouse. Broad shoulders make the latest edict of fashion and are rendered exceptionally attractive in this very pretty blouse, which includes the shallow round yoke, which also makes one of the latest and newest features. The model ts made of tobacco brown veiling, with yoke and cuffs of ecru lace and the trimband of ming silk embroidered w ith little circles and stitched with corticelli silk. It can, however, be rein any produced seasonable material aud is quite as well adapted to the odd waist as to the frock. The waist and sleeves are both gathered at their upper edges and joined to the band, which closes with the waist at the center front, while the yoke is closed at the left shoulder seam. The collar is one of r the new ones, of the sort, and can be slashed and worn with a tie, as illustrated, or left plain as pre- be removed from table linen by a generous application of a.cohol. Alum, the size of a hickory nut, dissolved In a pint of starch, will brighten the color In muslins, ginghams, and calicoes after washing. Carved furniture which defies the dust cloth can be made as attractive 8b new by brushing it with a sett hair, brush dipped in kerosene. Fashion In Capes. Short circular capes are all the fashion right now. - Those most in vogue for early autumn weather are of coarse lace; any lace like Cluny, Bruge or point Venlse Is In favor. The capes vary In length. Sometimes they fall just to the shoulders, others reach to the bust line, and still others touch the waist. In ecru or dyed to match the color of the gown they will be the most fashionable during the early fall. The smart girl la sure to contrive many novel ways of adding to the charm of her cape. She may fasten it down the front with big, artistic-lookinbuttons, or It may have the effect of being tied together with many srfiartlooklng little black satin bows. If she wishes to more decidedly change its effect, she will slip satin messaline or velvet ribbons through the meshes of the lace at either side of the front. At the neck the ribbons are tied In rosettes, and vnen again a bit further down. Trimmings of White Batiste. It is astonishing to what an extent the idea of trimming taffeta toilettes with flounces, frillings or boulllonnes of white batiste has taken. When they were first started the batiste employed was plain and simply edged by a very narrow hem, but though these still exist, many variations on the idea have been introduced. Thus we frequently see dotted or even sprigged muslins employed for the same purpose, and, in the case of flounces, the same showing quite elaborate embroidered designs is brought Into use. It Is a pretty fashion, and will certainly be continued for evening wear among fall styles. There Is in most cases a Bash of the same description, draped in folds around the waist and tied in a knot or bow with very long and broad ends rounded off at their extremities. tions of the Earth. Certain gestures are absolutely To identified with certain feelings. shake ones fist is to threaten; to hold up ones finger is to warn. To indicate thought we place the tips of the fingers on the forehead; to show concentrated attention we apply the whole hand. To rub the hands is i ferred. everywhere a sign of joy, and to clap The waist consists of the fitted linthem a sign of enthusiasm. It would ing, which is optional; fronts, back, be easy to multiply examples. Afsleeves, yoke and trimming band. firmation, negation, repulsion are ail When the lining is used the sleeves garments. indicated by motions that every one lines of ready-madare faced on indicated lines to form understands. cuffs, but when it Is omitted cuffs of Combination Under Garment It is the same, in quite as great a the required depth are made aeparate combined The that the ' advantage degree, with nationalities, in spite of Painted Belts. and joined to the lower edges of the the original diversity of the races that under garment means in a reduction of sleeves. belts in differently Is The waist at its gathered bulk at the waist and over the hips r make them up. The mimetic lower edge, made to blouse slightly at colored leathers will be an Important one and a is apis results at once from race, from well as front, and is closed in- accessory of the coming season. parent at a glance. The model illus- back as means history and from climate. of buttons and loops. by visibly to trated appeals The gesture of the Englishman is The quantity of material required every woman who fierce and harsh; he speaks briefly, &aMoi alms to keep her for the medium size is 3 yards 21 brusquely; he is cold, positive, force3 27 inches wide,1 outlines as nearly inches wide, WHILB yards ful. His salutation is cold and accenperect as possible or 1 yards 44 Inches wide, with TBA tuated, but hi handshake is loyal. lace for yoke and and is not in need yards of The gesture of Germany is heavy, of silk for trimover cuffs, and fullness of yards good humored and always ungraceful. . the bust. As shown ming band. niching Is very unbeMany of the Slav people are unwilling made of nainis it to many. coming to look one in the face, and they have sook with a low Handy Oil Dropper. With a knockabout coat a woman is a false gesture. A medicine dropper as an adjunct round neck, but It for anything, t ready The Spaniard and the Portuguese, can be cut with the square outline, or to the making of mayonnaise was the Make up your mind to the waistalthough dwelling ina Southern land, in V shape, or left high as may be pre- inspiration of a housewife' not long coats; they have come to stay. gesticulate little; j their language is ferred and all materials In vogue ho ever tried to ago. Everyone Gilt braid and buttons still give evirythmic, slow, solemn; they are grave, make are appropriate. In the mayonnaise knows the bother of dence that the war Is not ended. their salutation is a little theatrical. case of the model the trimming Is adding the oil slowly, drop by drop, Dolmans and mantles are the latest The Italian is lively, mobile, intelembroidery, but here again a choice until the dressing is thick enough. Importations for winter cloaks. ligent, gay; his language is harmo- is allowed as washable laces are much This woman experienced the same difEven scant pouches are doomed; nious, sonorous, warm and luminous, medliked and frills of the material also ficulty and met It with the the fittest waist has been accepted. like his countrys sky. The salutation are in vogue. icine dropper, which adds the oil. Feather rosettes for stiff hats have of the Italian Is quick and full of The garment is made with front, with machine-likregularity and pre rivals In those of taffeta and of ribbon. feeling, his gestures colored and ex- backs, side backs, under arm gores cision. aggerated. and back portion of skirt. The front Green Corn Soup. is fitted by means of double darts, so Grate and scrape the corn from DWARF FRUIT TREES POPULAR. absolutely making the garment enough ears to make one pint of pulp. smooth fitting and the necessary fullBreak the cobs In halves, put them Great Numbers of Them Used This ness at the back is provided by the in a kettle with enough cold water to Year for Holiday Decorations. skirt, which is gathered at Us upper cover them ; cover the kettle, and boll The production of diminutive fruit edge and joined to the body portion. the ears briskly for half an hour. Then trees from a foot to a foot and a half The quantity of material required strain this water into another saucehigh and bearing oranges, lemons and for the medium size Is 3 yards 36 pan and let it boil down to less than a apricots barely the size of a marble inches wide, with 3V& yards of wide The little soft cotton dish mops pint. has been greatly developed by the embroidery, 3 yards of narrow, 2 When reduced to the proper quanti2 inake of of excellent dusters. insertion and florists within the, last year or two. yards yards ty, add to the corn water the corn pulp A faded cotton dress can be made and let It simmer five There is scarcely a house in the fash- beading to trim as illustrated. then white by boiling in cream of tartar reason with salt, a littleminutes; and a ionable residence district without sugar water. some of these quaintly dwarfed trees Lace Waists. dash of pepper. Add one pint of hot A little soap mixed with stove black- cream, one tabiespoonful of butter and In its holiday decoration, says the Some handsome examples of lace will lastmore better and New York Sun. waists in snowball design are to be ing produce a heaping tabiespoonful, of flour disthe more elaborate being ing lustre than without. If the trees are sound and are kept found, solved In a little milk.- - Kht the whole in an even temperature they will be marked at 25. In these more elaboFor sponging out bureau drawers or just boll up after the floulf is In. e sideboards use tepid water containing beautiful for a month or six weeks. rate styles of waists the Put a tabiespoonful ' of finely Oeat numbers of them were bestowed yoke Is a distinguishing feature. The a small quantity of thymolin. chopped parsley In a soup tureen, pour The wax from dripping candles can in the soup, and serve. as Christmas gifts. general Idea for this yoke is to take In growing these trees the main medallions of lace and fasten them WITH A 8TO LE EFFECT. principle is to retard the flow of sap together by means of in the young trees. Whenever a new stitches of embroidery silk. Is waists net On effect the the yoke branch is In the act of formation its growth is kept back in various ways. sometimes supplied byor the stitched satin. Net The supply of water is the smallest tailor bands ,of silk are mostly of the figured net, possible allowance they can subsist on. waists And they are not permitted to enjoy some of the patterns showing a rather large conventional design. Black net abundant nourishment. The pioneers of the species were waists are particularly well thought of for the coming season. imported years ago, hut now they are grown so commonly in American Girls Russian Dress. greenhouses that numbers of them can Simple little frocks, with skirts and be had at $2 and 3. body portions in one suit little girls admirably well and are eminently Won the Old Man. this fashionable. This one Is peculiarly Sir, he said to her father, is a practical world. The spirit of attractive and can be made with the open slightly commercialism cannot be throttled by square neck, as the tender bonds of sentiment. PerIllustrated, or be haps you have noticed this? rendered high by I cannot say I have, replied the the addition of the stern parent but that neednt detain shield and standturn-ove- e . Hand-painte- cuar-acte- d tub all-ov- Wide-plaite- d . e band-mad- hand-wroug- you. Of course not, said the youth with an affable smile. What I was about to say is that while I am sitting up courting your daughter I feel that it would be no more than fair to offer to pay for the gas I assist in consuming. said the old man. And i Good, how about the coal? Do you expect me to throw that in? not, cried the youth. Certainly HI gladly throw in the coal. Bless you, I worked my way through college tending a furnace. And the old ingly. man smiled approv- Ambiguous. Representative William J. Sullivan of South Boston was billed to speak at a rally in South Boston one night for a worthy but poor young office-seeke- He wanted to say something particularly good, and in the course of his remarks astonished all by declaring: Mr. Soandsos word is as good as his bond, and he isn't worth a cent. , Consternation. The real difference between men is A strong will, a settled pur pose, an invincible determination, can accomplish almost anything; and in this lies the distinction between great men and little men. Fuller. energy. ing collar, and also allows a choice of the full length double sleeves or the outer ones In half length only. The model is made of royal blue with trimming of embroidered banding edged with black, and is both effective and durable, but all the material in vogue for little girls dresses cash-mer- are equally appropriate. The dress is made with front and backs and is laid in a box plait at center front and back with outward turning tucks at each side, the closing being made invisibly at the back beneath the box plait. The long sleeves are In bishop style, gathered intc straight cuffs, while the outer ones are In half length and In bell shape. The shield is quite separate and, rhen desired, Is arranged under the drtss closing at the center back. The quantity of material required for the medium size (8 years) is 5 yards 27 inches wide, 5 yards 32 inches wide or 3 yards 44 inches wide, with 4 yards of banding to trim as ollustrated. Washing Rugs. y od rugs may be washed repeated1 Ithout harming them. In fact, dng a good rug only makes the s more mellow. A writer in the v : 'o it ie Beaui'fl t!!r ' Fancy waists are always in demand and this one has the merit of being quite novel as well as eminently graceful. As illustrated it Is made of white silk, with the yoke and cuffs of lace over chiffon and finished with applique, the scarf of white embroidered crepe de Chine cream-colore- d - - and with fringe. The waist is full below tho tucks and is closed in .ibly at the left of the front on a line with the scarf. To make the waist for a woman of medium size will be required 44 yards 21, 314 yards 27 or 2 yards 44 irches wide, with yards lace and Tfc yards r ei!k oi for scarf. all-ov- |